Plaintiff, wife, obtained an interlocutory decree of divorce from defendant on the ground of extreme cruelty. The marriage had lasted five years. The court found that certain parcels of real property were acquired during the marriage and title taken in the names of plaintiff and defendant as joint tenants, but that inasmuch as it was purchased with the separate funds of defendant it was his separate property, and further, that in taking the property in joint tenancy defendant did so “as a mere matter of convenience to himself and in order that title would as he believed, pass' to plaintiff one-half only of said properties upon his death if he had not otherwise directed in his life-time. . . . The Court further specifically finds that the defendant did not intend to vest any present interest in said properties in the plaintiff and that *787 she was fully conversant with that fact.” The court also found that plaintiff had no interest in that real property.
Plaintiff challenges the admission of evidence to the effect that there was no intention to create a joint tenancy, and plaintiff acquired no such rights, and also the sufficiency of the evidence on that issue and the lack of interest of plaintiff in the rents, issues and profits from said property.
Turning first to the question of admissibility of evidence and assuming that the real property was acquired with the separate funds of defendant, we have a situation where a husband purchases real property after marriage with his separate funds and has the grantor convey the property to him and his wife as joint tenants. The evidence to refute the joint tenancy consisted of the following: “Q. Now, you have stated that when you acquired these properties and had them placed in joint tenancy, you did it because you were under the impression that if you were married at the time of your death she could get half of them ? A. That is correct. Q. Well, what did you think would be the situation if you were not married? A. Well, they would be my property. Q. Well, they stood in the two names. How were you going to get out of the two names? A. That, I don’t know. I did not think of it at the time, because when I made the arrangement on the first place Mrs. Huber was in the car when I came out and made the payment, and I told her: ‘Well, I have fixed it so you will get half if we are married at the time of my death. ’ Q. Are you sure you said: ‘If we are married’ or ‘When I die you will get half?’ A. No, I remember because we parked the car five feet from the entrance.” And “Q. Did you intend, at the time you bought the third piece of property, to give to Mrs. Huber a half interest or any interest whatsoever in the property at that time? A. Not at that time. Q. Did you know, at the time you took the third piece of property in your joint names, that there was a legal presumption she became the owner of an undivided one-half interest in and to the property? A. No.” And “Q. Was it your intention on any of these properties that she should have become vested in any interest during your lifetime ? A. No, sir, she was not. ” The property was purchased with defendant’s separate funds. Plaintiff deposited the rents she collected in the defendant’s separate bank account upon which she had no authority to draw. The leases on the property were executed by defendant alone. Plaintiff never claimed any interest in the property *788 and no accounting was made to her of the rents and profits thereof. While it may be true that a delivery to one of two grantees is considered a delivery to both, no physical delivery of the deeds was ever made to plaintiff and she never had possession of any of the property here involved.
It is clear that evidence is admissible to show that real property was intended to be held as community property and is in fact of that character although title has been acquired under a deed accepted by husband and wife and executed in a form that ordinarily creates in the grantee a common law estate- such as joint tenancy, and that an oral agreement to convert property into community property may be established.
(Sears
v.
Rule, ante,
p. 131 [
*789
Plaintiff argues, however, that the undisclosed and secret intention of the husband not to make a gift to his wife cannot be established by parol evidence, citing
Shaver
v.
Canfield,
Plaintiff also relies upon
Kenney
v.
Kenney,
Plaintiff cites
Bias
v.
Reed,
We conclude therefore that the evidence was admissible and sufficient to sustain the finding that defendant did not intend to make a present gift to plaintiff. Plaintiff calls attention to evidence that defendant referred to the property as “ours” and other like expressions, but nothing more than a conflict was created which the trial court resolved against her.
In this state it is settled that because of the confidential relationship between husband and wife, an oral agreement between the spouses in connection with a conveyance of real property between them or by a third person to one of them can be enforced by making the grantee a constructive trustee for the other spouse if the grantee violates such an oral agreement.
(Quinn
v.
Reilly,
Plaintiff asserts that community and joint funds were used to purchase the above mentioned property and hence it was joint tenancy or community property. It will be recalled that implicit in the court’s finding is a conclusion to the contrary. Plaintiff and defendant" were married in 1937 (they lived together about five years). It is conceded that defendant had as his separate property, assets of about $30,000 when *791 he married plaintiff, consisting in part of savings of about $14,000. Defendant maintained a commercial account in his name in the Security First National Bank. Defendant testified as to the first parcel, he made the down payment of $338.40 from his account in the Security First National Bank, and the balance of $4,431.34 from his savings account in a different bank. The second parcel was purchased with funds transferred from the savings account to the Security First National Bank account. The rest of the property was handled in a similar manner. Generally, defendant testified: “Q. And did the purchase price of all of these properties come from your separate funds? A. They did. Q. No contributions of any kind were made by Mrs. Huber? A. None from anybody.” Contrary to plaintiff’s testimony defendant stated that plaintiff did not perform work in improving and repairing the property. The foregoing is clearly sufficient to support a finding that the property was paid for from his separate funds. Beal property purchased with the separate funds of the husband is his separate property. (See Tomaier v. Tomaier, supra; 3 Cal.Jur. 10-Yr.Supp., Community Property, § 38.) Likewise the rents, issues and profits therefrom and increase in value thereof are separate property. (Civ. Code, §163; 3 Cal.Jur. 10-Yr.Supp., Community Property, § 44.) It, therefore, follows that the equitable title to the property, the increase in value and rents and profits thereof were defendant’s separate property, unless there are some factors which alter the situation.
Plaintiff contends that the purchase price of the property and rents, issues and profits are community property because the funds for the purchase and rents, etc., were placed in defendant’s account with the Security First National Bank in which also were placed his earnings; that the latter were community property and there was a commingling of funds. Plainly the trial court properly concluded by implication that the purchase price was from separate funds, either because there was no commingling or the funds were traced. Defendant in each case transferred sufficient money for the purchase of the property from his savings account to the Security First National Bank account, and immediately checked it out to pay the purchase price. It is suggested that there is some $18,000 unaccounted for by defendant, but in the face of the testimony of the defendant as to the source of the funds used for the purchase price, such cannot disturb the court’s finding. What may have happened to the income from the real property and
*792
the amount withdrawn by defendant from his business is not significant, as it lacked community status—it remained his separate property. If a portion of the income from • some of the separate real property was used to purchase other real property, the latter would be separate property". In this connection, with reference to the deposit of defendant’s earnings and the rents, etc., from the real property in the same account, plaintiff urges that defendant drew $300 per month from his business (custom broker, which was admittedly his separate property) and that such constituted his earnings. In regard to earnings, the rule is that where, the husband is operating a business which is his separate property, income from such business is allocated to community or separate property in accordance with the extent to which it is allocable to the husband’s efforts or his capital investment.
(Estate of Gold,
Finally, plaintiff contends that the court could not properly in this divorce action determine that plaintiff had no joint tenancy separate property interest in the real property and that it belonged to defendant alone as his separate property. She urges that a court in a divorce action is limited to the disposition of the community property and cannot pass upon a dispute as to the separate property, citing
Allen
v.
Allen,
The judgment is affirmed.
Gibson, C. J., Shenk, J., Edmonds, J., Traynor, J., Schauer, J., and Spence, J., concurred.
Appellant’s petition for a rehearing was denied April 25, 1946.
